Daily Mail

Unsuitable? Lloyd’s may ditch formal attire after 335 years

- By Francesca Washtell City Correspond­ent

ONE of the City’s grandest institutio­ns could ditch suits for the first time in its 335year history.

A group representi­ng brokers at Lloyd’s of London, the world’s largest insurance market which built its reputation in the maritime industry, want to scrap the ‘stuffy’ dress code.

Nearly 50,000 people work at broking and underwriti­ng firms based at Lloyd’s – and people who are in the building are expected to abide by a strict clothing policy.

Men are asked to wear a suit or jacket with trousers and ties – although ties are no longer strictly enforced – and women should dress in a ‘smart business style’. But the London & Internatio­nal Insurance Brokers Associatio­n (LIIBA) has called for a shake-up that also includes letting people work from home.

Lloyd’s of London was started in 1686 in the small coffee house

‘More flexible environmen­t’

of Edward Lloyd in the City – and now handles insurance for businesses all over the world.

Based in a Grade 1-listed building near The Gherkin, it operates as a market where policies are bought and sold on its trading floors by traders, independen­t brokers and wealthy individual­s who underwrite policies.

Long queues usually form at desks for brokers and underwrite­rs to haggle over the terms of policies before sealing them with a handwritte­n signature and a company stamp.

But LIIBA has said when staff return to physical trading there should be ‘an end to... long queues for brokers at Lloyd’s for simple policy endorsemen­t, dress codes and any insistence on being full-time in the office’.

Christophe­r Croft, LIIBA’s chief executive, said: ‘We envisage a world where face-to-face meetings continue to be at the core of how London distinguis­hes itself from the competitio­n, albeit in a more flexible environmen­t.’

He added: ‘ The balance of home/office working will not return to the pre-March 2020 status quo.’ Lloyd’s of London did not comment last night.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom